Thursday, June 28, 2012

Ramblings from the Farm

These are baby Oyster mushrooms in the early fruiting stage. In the past few days, since taking this picture, they have changed yet again. I'm so curious to watch these phases take place and will be guessing at when to harvest them, especially considering how we have neither grown nor eaten this type of mushroom EVER! My husband has refused to eat mushrooms of any kind, for as long as I've known him. I'm hoping to convert him with these tasty homegrown delights.

We took another gamble this week by installing new bees (a 5-frame nuc) in our hive, which saw only two months of occupancy nearly two years ago. I was sad and tired of seeing if sit empty in the garage. The Italian package originally installed were mostly drowned by my inept attempt at feeding and then finished off by our voracious dragonflies. The nuc I placed a week ago seems healthy and vigorous. As I was opening the cardboard package, several frames tipped over onto the ground. A simple adjustment from vertical to horizontal positioning was enough to warrant an attack directed at me. Several made their way under my shirt, which I had neglected to tuck in, stinging me on the belly. So as my visiting mother and children watched from a window of our house, I high-stepped and cursed my way across the yard in a sprint, covered in angry bees. Lesson learned.

Remarkably, all of our tomatoes have begun to set fruit. These are Sungold cherry tomatoes.

And blueberries are coming along ahead of schedule.

We also added a Copper Maran rooster to our older laying crew. "Harold" is quite handsome and friendly. He took his male duties very seriously and we collected six fertilized eggs from our Rhode Island Red hen, immediately. My nearly-five-year-old was too excited about the prospect of hatching chicks to let this project slide. So, we a built a cardboard box incubator using an old desk lamp, a wire rack from the toaster oven, and a recycled refrigerator shelf.

Poor Harold lost his gorgeous tail to a fox the same day I took this photo. Since then, he has been severely depressed and failed to crow at dawn. I'm actually looking forward to his recovery. I miss all the racket and farmyard reminder to get moving out of bed.

2 comments:

Hi, i am cecilia and clicking on names and following comments led me here and i am so glad. i too have bees and chickens and cows and sheep and gardens on my little sustainable farm.. so it is great to see others living the healthy simple life.. Your photos are lovely.. take care c

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Mt Mansfield from our Island home

About Me

Our backyard Vermont farm was my early retirement from research science. Now it is a passion to live simply, while providing income to sustain our family. Learning as we go, using knowledge borrowed from the internet and books, our family of five is attempting to practice skills lost from my great-grandparent's generation. Thanks for tuning in.